The release of Sarah Palin's book, Going Rogue, has put the former Vice Presidential candidate back in the spotlight--which seems like the perfect time for the woman behind her scandalous $150,000 campaign wardrobe to finally reveal herself. Find out all about the mystery stylist, after the jump.

Today's New York Times reveals that Lisa A. Kline (no relation to L.A. boutique owner Lisa Kline), a New York City based mother of three known for dressing corporate types, was the woman behind "wardrobegate." So why has she finally chosen to reveal herself? "I want people to see that I did the best job I could under crazy circumstances,” she told the Times. “I want people to say, ‘Wow,’ you know, ‘Not bad.’ ” She received the call about dressing Palin just a few days before the Republican National Convention, which was happening just 72 hours after a long Labor Day weekend. So with a holiday ahead of her, her contacts on summer vacation, and very limited time, she did what the rest of us would do: She went shopping. In regular stores. At full price.

"In other circumstances, Ms. Kline said, she could have bought Ms. Palin’s wardrobe for far below retail through her relationships with designers. But it was the Friday of a holiday weekend and 'there wasn’t a person around,' she said. 'The only avenue was retail, straight retail.'

She set to work in New York, buying elegant pieces at Saks Fifth Avenue and Barneys. When she left for the convention Labor Day morning, she had 'a pretty decent amount of clothing to choose from,' she said.

Arriving in Minneapolis with a seamstress and an assistant she’d enlisted, Ms. Kline planned a 'run through' of outfits with Ms. Palin for an appearance she would make greeting Mr. McCain, as he arrived by plane Wednesday afternoon.

But late on Tuesday, Ms. Kline said she was asked to provide clothes for the entire Palin family, including the candidate’s husband, Todd; their sons Track and Trig, the infant; and daughters Bristol, who was pregnant, Willow and Piper. Levi Johnston, Bristol’s then-boyfriend, was also included.

'The campaign advisers realized the kids, everybody, needed to be dressed,' Ms. Kline said. “This was a family that was about to stand before the world, and they just came with their everyday-life clothes.'"

What followed was a frenzy of shopping, fittings, alterations, and the crossing of fingers that they'd gotten everything right under such unexpected circumstances. Now that the mystery behind Sarah's "secret stylist" has been revealed, do you think this issue will finally be put to rest? Do you think this will serve as a lesson in dressing for future candidates on the campaign trail? Are you still surprised at how much attention this whole issue got? Discuss!